问题
I want to capture the key event "right mouse button pressed, then left mouse button pressed". No problem in autohotkey. However I am having trouble with still allowing the right-mouse key to work alone.
1) this works:
RButton & LButton::
Send X
Return
works as expected:
- If I press right mouse button, then left mouse button, "X" is sent to the active window
- right-click event is captured by Authotkey: no context menu appears when I press the right mouse button alone. This is the intended outcome
2) this works
~RButton & LButton::
Send Y
Return
works as expected:
- If I press right mouse button, then left mouse button, "Y" is sent to the active window
- right-click event is not captured by Authotkey: context menu does appear when I press the right mouse button alone or together with the left button. This is the intended outcome
3) Now I want to do different things depending on the active window.
this does not work (careful: this will disable righ-click in every application)
#If WinActive("ahk_class MozillaWindowClass")
RButton & LButton::
Send X
Return
#If !WinActive("ahk_class MozillaWindowClass")
~RButton & LButton::
Send Y
Return
does not work as expected:
- in Firefox left-right sends X, in other applications left-right sends Y
- however, right-click is disabled in every application
What am I doing wrong here?
edit:
the goal is this: I want a global hotkey on Right+left-click with RButton & LButton
. In specific applications that I have tested for compatibility, I want right+left click to suppress sending right-click, and then send right-click manually using autohotkey. However, since some applications might have trouble processing mouseevents sent by autohotkey, in all untested applications I want to use ~RButton & LButton
with the ~ to pass throught right-click events
回答1:
Here's one that supports right click dragging!
Hotkey, LButton, off
#IfWinActive ahk_class MozillaWindowClass
RButton & LButton::
Send X
Return
RButton::return
#IfWinNotActive ahk_class MozillaWindowClass
~$RButton::
Hotkey, LButton, on
while GetKeyState("RButton", "P") {
continue
}
Hotkey, LButton, off
Return
LButton::Send Y
Return
It handles RButton
manually. When RButton
is pressed, it enables the LButton
hotkey and waits for RButton
to be released before deactivating it. The RButton
hotkey uses ~
, which passes the click through normally.
LButton
is disabled at the start by the line at the top.
Another way would have been to send {RButton Down}
at the start of the hotkey and {RButton Up}
at the end.
In response to your edit, the only programs that reject Autohotkey's sent events should be those that rely on low level hooks... The real trouble with the method down at the bottom is it only sends a single click, not processing holding the button. This method, and sending down and up separately, should both do that properly.
The bug with active window described at the bottom of this answer still exists, but that's a problem with the #IfWin[Not]Active
.
Old stuff
See the documentation on the ampersand (emphasis mine):
You can define a custom combination of two keys (except joystick buttons) by using " & " between them. In the below example, you would hold down Numpad0 then press the second key to trigger the hotkey:
Numpad0 & Numpad1::MsgBox You pressed Numpad1 while holding down Numpad0. Numpad0 & Numpad2::Run Notepad
In the above example, Numpad0 becomes a prefix key; but this also causes Numpad0 to lose its original/native function when it is pressed by itself. To avoid this, a script may configure Numpad0 to perform a new action such as one of the following:
Numpad0::WinMaximize A ; Maximize the active/foreground window. Numpad0::Send {Numpad0} ; Make the release of Numpad0 produce a Numpad0 keystroke. See comment below.
The presence of one of the above hotkeys causes the release of Numpad0 to perform the indicated action, but only if you did not press any other keys while Numpad0 was being held down.
So, following that example:
#If WinActive("ahk_class MozillaWindowClass")
RButton & LButton::
Send X
Return
RButton::return
#If !WinActive("ahk_class MozillaWindowClass")
RButton & LButton::
Send Y
Return
RButton::Send {RButton}
Note RButton
requires a variant that does nothing in WinActive
, at least with my testing (see below): RButton::return
Since I'm using Autohotkey standard, not Autohotkey_L, I don't have #If
and the above was untested. The following I did test, and it works.
#IfWinActive ahk_class MozillaWindowClass
RButton & LButton::
Send X
Return
RButton::return
#IfWinNotActive ahk_class MozillaWindowClass
RButton & LButton::
Send Y
Return
RButton::Send {RButton}
An interesting bug I've noticed is the second (NotActive) variant applies occasionally to Firefox:
- Another window is active
RButton
down is sent- Firefox is not active, so the second variant is processed
- <delay> (
RButton
is held down, though the delay could be imperceptible, in the order of milliseconds, to infinite) - Firefox becomes active
- <delay> (still held down)
RButton
up is sent, which sendsRButton
as per the documentation. Because Firefox became active in the delay between the active window check and whenRButton
is sent,RButton
is sent to Firefox.
This happens when both Firefox and another window are visible, and the other window is the active one at the time of the click.
I've tried to fix this bug by adding an extra IfWinNotActive
check within the RButton
hotkey, but it did not seem to work.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/10317568/capturing-right-clickleft-click-with-autohotkey-unexpected-behaviour